European Union law : a very short introduction / Anthony Arnull.
2017
KJE947 .A758 2017 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
European Union law : a very short introduction / Anthony Arnull.
Published
Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, 2017.
Copyright
©2017
Call Number
KJE947 .A758 2017
Edition
First edition.
ISBN
9780198749981 (paperback)
0198749988 (paperback)
0198749988 (paperback)
Description
xviii, 152 pages : illustrations ; 18 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)967869382
Summary
The European Union is rarely out of the news and, as it deals with the consequences of the Brexit vote and struggles to emerge from the eurozone crisis, it faces difficult questions about its future. In this debate, the law has a central role to play, whether the issue be the governance of the eurozone, the internal market, 'clawing back powers from Europe' or reducing so-called 'Brussels red tape'. 00In this Very Short Introduction Anthony Arnull looks at the laws and legal system of the European Union, including EU courts, and discusses the range of issues that the European Union has been given the power to regulate, such as the free movement of goods and people. He considers why an organisation based on international treaties has proved capable of having far-reaching effects on both its Member States and on countries that lie beyond its borders, and discusses how its law and legal system have proved remarkably effective in ensuring that Member States respect the commitments they made when they signed the Treaties. Answering some of the key questions surrounding EU law, such as what exactly it is about, and how it has become part of the legal DNA of its Member States so much more effectively than other treaty-based regimes, Arnull considers the future for the European Union -- Source other than Library of Congress.
Note
The European Union is rarely out of the news and, as it deals with the consequences of the Brexit vote and struggles to emerge from the eurozone crisis, it faces difficult questions about its future. In this debate, the law has a central role to play, whether the issue be the governance of the eurozone, the internal market, 'clawing back powers from Europe' or reducing so-called 'Brussels red tape'. 00In this Very Short Introduction Anthony Arnull looks at the laws and legal system of the European Union, including EU courts, and discusses the range of issues that the European Union has been given the power to regulate, such as the free movement of goods and people. He considers why an organisation based on international treaties has proved capable of having far-reaching effects on both its Member States and on countries that lie beyond its borders, and discusses how its law and legal system have proved remarkably effective in ensuring that Member States respect the commitments they made when they signed the Treaties. Answering some of the key questions surrounding EU law, such as what exactly it is about, and how it has become part of the legal DNA of its Member States so much more effectively than other treaty-based regimes, Arnull considers the future for the European Union -- Source other than Library of Congress.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 127-133) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
xv
Abbreviations
xvii
List of illustrations
xix
Introduction
1
1.
What is EU law about?
3
2.
From Common Market to European Union
18
3.
Secondary EU law
28
4.
How secondary EU law is made
47
5.
On the origin of treaties
61
6.
EU law in the national courts
77
7.
Court of Justice of the European Union
91
8.
Enforcing EU law
99
9.
Coping with crises
112
References
127
List of cases and EU measures
135
Further reading
143
Index
145